In Retrospect...

A Letter from the Editor-in-Chief

You have before you a Special Retrospective Issue of Speculative Grammarian. How did that happen?

Well, I said to myself one day, “Y’know, self, it’s a lot of hard work putting together an issue of SpecGram. I think we need a break. How about we just re-run a bunch of old articles and see if anyone notices?” And my self replied, “Gee, self, that doesn’t seem like the right thing to do. What about an issue highlighting some of the best articles from years gone by?” “Well, self, that would be a fine thing to do—but it doesn’t really address my goal of not having to do any actual work.” “You are kind of lazy, self.” “Yeah, I know.” “And yet you are the Editor-in-Chief. How did that happen?” “Beats me, self, beats me.”

So, despite the laziest of intentions, you have before you a Special Retrospective Issue of Speculative Grammarian, in which we have (mostly) short reviews of (mostly) some of the best articles that are at least five years old. Old readers of SpecGram will have a chance to revisit some nearly-forgotten favorites. New readers of SpecGram will have a chance to discover some new eventually-to-be-forgotten favorites. Five-year-old readers of SpecGram will probably not get any of the humor, and should probably finish pre-K Ling 101 first.

I’d also like to point out that the SpecGram website also features the complete Archives of SpecGram,The Journal of the Linguistic Society of South-Central New Caledonia,Babel (not that one, the other one), Psammeticus Quarterly, and Lingua Pranca and kin. Over a thousand articles are available, ensuring everyone’s endless intentional enjoyment and occasional incidental edification.

Now, to properly kick off this Special Retrospective Issue, I thought it would be nice to review some of SpecGram’s history.

For the longest time, it was generally believed that Speculative Grammarian was founded by Petrus Hispanus, one of the original speculative grammarians, in 1276, shortly after he became Pope John XXI. Only relatively recently were we legally able/forced to reveal that the journal began life as Íslensk Tölvumálvísindi—founded in Reykjavík in 881 by Ingólfr Arnarson, and passed to Petrus Hispanus under a new name in the 1270s.

Despite the amazing amount of ground-breaking linguistics always being done at SpecGram, disasters have always plagued us. A bizarre series of hurricanes (4), tornadoes (2), volcanic eruptions (6), fires (3 7/16—including the Great Chicago Fire) and landfill mudslides (18) reduced the SpecGramArchives to mere tatters—though we’ve been working hard to rebuild them for the last ten years.

Eventually SpecGram found its way to the semi-tropical jungles of Houston in the 1990s, and then fell off the map for a time, before being resurrected on the web and around the world—bringing us more-or-less to the present day.

It’s a crazy story, but it is ours. It all makes sense. It is all true. Even the seemingly contradictory bits. Every word is true.

Now, let’s take a look back at some of the most restrospectable articles from years gone by.